Monday, April 11, 2016

I like to promote my friends and family and today I'm writing about Jeff Newcomer, my brother.
Jeff Newcomer is based in Minneapolis so I get to see him about once or twice a month. He helps out with the boys if they need to get picked up from school once in a while or if they need an extra hand at their Cub Scouts meetings.

Jeff is a great photographer with over 20 years experience on the job doing portraits, restaurant, food, events, and corporate imagery.

I'm currently working on his website, http://www.jrnewcomer.com. Also trying to improve his search-engine optimization. Would you believe there is another Jeff Newcomer who is also a photographer? The other Jeff has all the google top slots -- for now.

I'm still working on the jrnewcomer.com website, trying to develop a responsive portfolio for him in between doing some layouts and design jobs and chauffering the boys here and there.

Thursday, March 24, 2016

Small Ring Dishes

I love having a few of these around for vitamins, a few small chocolates, or earrings...

I make them by handbuilding pinch pots. I use a squeeze bottle to apply the black slip. They are fired at one of the fabulouse Minneapolis parks nearby (Fuller Park). A lot of our park buildings have ceramics facilities -- what a great city.

Here are some pics from the process.

Here are some recent pics that my brother took - he transformed by sunny dining room into a photo studio.

Most of these dishes are about 1-inch deep and 2.5 to 3.5 inches diameter.

Here's a pic from the day we shot the images - you can see how Jeff used white paper - he also put thin white curtains up to make the light more diffuse. We decided to use Skittles for the pic, because they're more colorful and fun-looking than chocolate pieces.

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Why tardigrades are so awesome...
Apparently not everyone has watched the Cosmos episode that featured the waterbear or tardigrade. Here's a link to a 30-second clip from the second episode of Cosmos (above) https://youtu.be/2I-PQxuPkjA

These
little invertebrates live all over the earth and they are pretty
amazing because they can survive the vacuum of outer space, being
bombarded with all kinds of gamma radiation. Every other
life form from earth would just die out there. But when
International Space Station scientists put tardigrades in outerspace,
they dry up into a little hard balls, then when brought back to earth
and hydrated, the little suckers just come alive and start eating and
mating!

Serious science from http://tardigradesinspace.blogspot.com/

"YES, indeed many of the tardigrades survived the trip in space, and a
few of them became the first animals to return alive after exposure to
both space vacuum and solar radiation ... the space vacuum and cosmic radiation did not affect their survival or reproduction at all. This was true for both Richtersius coronifer and Milnesium tardigradum.
What this means is that these animals can either protect their cells
from expected damage of the extremely dehydration impact of space
vacuum, or that they can repair damage that arise in some way. At the
moment, we don’t know which is true.

I carved a couple tardigrade lino-cut blocks for printing on blank books and blank cards. The
initial tardigrade notebook I put on my Etsy shop was my biggest seller of
2015.

It's kind of cute. It has eight fat little legs.
The mouth parts are weird, like some kind of alien, the tardigrade's mouth has a tube that pushes in and out vacuuming up its food. I wasn't sure how to draw the mouth (which is also its anus). I made the mouth cuter than reality -- simplifying it
into more of an anemone or flower-like appendage. The point of the art isn't scientific, it's about adoring these little critters which are part of many earth biomes (and maybe they came from outerspace - theory of exogenesis:

"Panspermia Hypothesis – the “seeds” of life exist throughout the universe (perhaps as extremophiles!). The Earth was “seeded” by life arriving from space (also called “Exogenesis”).

Next: to get these items placed into nerd-friendly shops like science museums. Let me know if you have a contact there who I should contact to place some of these items. Posted by Kelly Newcomer, Jan. 2016

I had seen the Archigram show at the Contemporary in Chicago a few years ago (Archigram was a futuristic architecture group from England in the late 60s, early 70s) In this exhibition, I was introduced to similar groups -- a few pics:

Mr Machine checking out the posters
Please excuse the lack of detail regarding some of these works - My aim here is to preserve some of my inspiration and favorite works from the show.

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

I am currently looking for design or social media work, especially small jobs. Preferably for social justice groups.
Contact me for pdf of design samples (low-res version below)
Some of my layouts are online: https://www.scribd.com/PowderhornArtFair and https://wedgenewsmpls.wordpress.com/

Friday, March 27, 2015

On September 22, 2005, Minnesota Senator, Mark Dayton, introduced legislation to establish a Department of Peace and Nonviolence that included the establishment of an Office of Technology for Peace. Here is the link to that legislation https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/109/s1756/text

I made a comic about it back in October 2005, but now I am finally getting around to posting more info about this legislation. How cool for Mr. Dayton, to be able to write a bill with such a visionary message -- that's the kind of stuff I'd want to try for if I was a United States Senator. (Vote for Newcomer!)

John Lennon and Yoko Ono liked to talk about the war machine, and the necessity of a peace machine. So, this is part of what needs to happen (in every nation) to help bring about peace.

Basically, this legislation was not adopted. But let's hope for a similar bill to be ratified sometime soon.

107.

Office of
Technology for Peace

(a)

In
general

There shall be in the Department an Office of Technology
for Peace, the head of which shall be the Assistant Secretary of Technology for
Peace. The Assistant Secretary of Technology for Peace shall carry out those
functions in the Department affecting the awareness, study, and impact of
developing new technologies on the creation and maintenance of domestic and
international peace.

(b)

Grants

The
Assistant Secretary of Technology for Peace shall provide grants for the
research and development of technologies in transportation, communications, and
energy that—

(1)

are nonviolent in
their application; and

(2)

encourage the
conservation and sustainability of natural resources in order to prevent future
conflicts regarding scarce resources.

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

On Jan. 13, 2015, I went to a free arts funding panel offered by Springboard for the Arts and Hennepin County Libraries. I ended up with a couple new goals about art grants.

Goals:

1. Approach WARM Women's Art Registry of Minnesota http://www.thewarm.org/mentor-program/mentor-intensive/ and maybe do their mentor program, or at least write the funding for the mentor program into one of my grant applications. (yikes: Looks like it costs $90 per month) But WARM members have other get togethers and hopefully they can help me as a mom who put her art career on hold for the kids and special needs issues of kid - who is ready finally to refocus on art-making but I still have to juggle other caregiving responsibilities. I became a WARM member for $55 for one year - which will get me into their other programs (not the Mentor one though)

2. I used to have a goal of applying for ONE art grant per year. Maybe two. (MN State Arts Board Artist Initiative Grant and McKnight Fellowship). Now I am more in mind to apply for three - and go for something like a travel/study grant or a grant for a project with a community-emphasis - there might be something I'm already involved in (like those conversations I've been having with Tammy Ortegon about balancing caregiving & art-making - that could possibly turn into a project with a community connection for which we could get a grant to help realize it).

The presenters were:

Delta Giordano, she is an artist with a theater background and she works for the Knight Foundation which has an innovative new program called the Knight Arts Challenge. http://www.knightarts.org/knight-arts-challenge/stpaul

Cynthia Gehrig, President of the Jerome Foundation http://www.jeromefdn.org which gives fellowships to emerging artists, and also sponsors a travel/study grant, and also sponsors residencies for artists at Northern Clay Center, Highpoint Center for Printmaking, New York Mills, and Textile CenterShannon Forney from http://www.mrac.org/ MRAC - she's also a performer, a clown, and part-owner of a coffee shop where they have the Smallest Museum http://www.vita.mn/crawl/277644751.html?page=all Noah Keesecker Moderated - Program director of artistic development at Springboard http://springboardforthearts.org - he's also a composer.